U.S. 'Super' Panelists Studying Old Deficit Proposals

The heads of a Congress deficit super committee said Wednesday most members were reviewing budget-balancing studies of recent years in a sign the panel was unlikely to try to reinvent the wheel.

Most of the committee members are reviewing the deficit reduction work that many others have engaged in over the past several years, said a joint statement from Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas.

The two are co-chairmen of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction established by Congress as part of a recent deal to raise the federal debt ceiling. The committee must find at least $1.2 trillion in budget savings over 10 years.

Their statement was brief, with few details on the outlook for the panel, which will be under intense scrutiny when it starts working. When that happens has been a topic of much speculation on Capitol Hill in recent days.

The panel's first meeting is unlikely to occur before Sept. 6, a Senate aide familiar with the discussions told Reuters.

The committee has a $2 million budget and will use that to hire staff and hold hearings, the location and frequency of which is still up in the air. Under the statute establishing it, the panel's first meeting must occur by September 16.

Several recent deficit-reduction proposals are sure to be under review by the panelists, including the December 2010 Bowles-Simpson report that called for a major tax code overhaul and deep spending cuts reaching every corner of the government and offending special interests across the political spectrum.

Bowles-Simpson urged a range of tax rises, as well. So did a November 2010 report by a group of experts organized by the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank.

We are excited that committee members and staff from both sides of the aisle are eager to engage one another as we begin our work, Murray and Hensarling said.

The super committee must complete and vote on a proposal by Nov. 23 for submission to Congress as legislation. Congress must give the proposal an up-or-down vote, with no amendments allowed, by Dec. 23. If either deadline goes unmet, $1.2 trillion in automatic budget cuts are triggered in 2013.

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